Buhayin ang Tanaga!

Friday, March 04, 2005

3 Tanagas: 1-800-Filipino

The Tanaga below is a departure from the native language which Tanaga was intended for. It is written in the second tongue of Filipinos, (English), which is technically already quasi-native to the Filipinos.

When the business outsourcing trend reached the Philippines - the prevailing competitive advantage that is harped is based on what is deemed a high level of proficiency in the English language of Filipinos (with minimal accent disparity), as well as a technology-abled workforce.

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Resurrecting The Tanaga

The Tanaga is a type of short Filipino poem, consisting of four lines with seven syllables
each with the same rhyme at the end of each line - that is to say a 7777 syllable form,
with an AAAA rhyme pattern. It's almost a dying art!

The Modern Tanaga

Its modern counterpart, The Modern Tanaga, still uses the 7777 syllable count,
but rhymes range from dual rhyme forms: AABB, ABAB, ABBA; to freestyle forms such as AAAB, BAAA, or ABCD. Tanagas
do not have titles traditionally because the Tanaga should speak for itself. However, moderns can opt to give them titles.

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Blog posts, reviews and articles, unless explicitly said
are copyright of this blog. Contributions, poems and other Tanaga
or similar works are however, copyright of their original authors.
The intention here is the appreciation of the Tanaga as an
art form. Therefore, this blog does not guarantee the quality of
works in other languages, nor take part in their author's intention
or politics.